Abstract

BackgroundHigh mortality rates have been reported in patients with anorexia nervosa, mainly due to cardiovascular alterations. The purpose of the present study was to assess cardiac structural and functional abnormalities some 20 years after initial treatment in a sample of adolescent-onset anorexia nervosa (A-AN) and to compare them with matched healthy controls (HC).MethodsA sample of 29 women diagnosed and treated for AN during adolescence (A-AN) were assessed more than 20 years later. A complete cardiac evaluation was carried out including an electrocardiogram (ECG) and a standard 2D echocardiography. Thirty matched HC were also assessed.ResultsIn the A-AN group, four subjects had a body mass index lower than 18.5 and met full DSM 5 criteria for AN at follow-up (Low-Weight group). They were compared with the rest of the sample (n = 25) who had normalized their weight (Normal-Weight group), though some still showed some eating disorder symptoms. Both groups were compared with the HC group. Subjects in the Low-Weight group presented statistically significant decreases in the left ventricular end-diastolic and left atrium dimensions and left ventricular mass in comparison with the Normal-Weight group and the HC. No other differences in cardiac parameters were found between groups.ConclusionsEchocardiographic and ECG parameters of adults who had presented A-AN twenty years earlier and currently maintained normal weight were similar to those of HC who had never been treated or diagnosed with AN. Adult subjects with A-AN who still had low weight in the long term present certain cardiac abnormalities similar to those seen in short-lasting disease. More studies are needed to confirm these results in a larger sample.

Highlights

  • High mortality rates have been reported in patients with anorexia nervosa (AN), largely due to medical complications associated with poor nutritional status [1]

  • Galetta et al [4] found greater QT dispersion in females with AN than in constitutionally thin women or normal weight women; they confirmed the findings of previous studies that had reported a reduction in left ventricular (LV) mass in AN with echocardiography [5]

  • Two patients (6.9%) showed partial remission of AN. The former anorexia nervosa (A-AN) subjects were divided into two groups according to their weight status: the Low-Weight group, which included the four patients (6.8%) who fulfilled DSM-5 criteria for AN and had a body mass index (BMI) < 18.5 [27], and the Normal-Weight group (n = 25; 86.2%), with a current BMI above 18.5 (including patients who still met criteria for an eating disorder (ED) and patients who showed a complete remission of the ED

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Summary

Introduction

High mortality rates have been reported in patients with anorexia nervosa (AN), largely due to medical complications associated with poor nutritional status [1]. Galetta et al [4] found greater QT dispersion in females with AN than in constitutionally thin women or normal weight women; they confirmed the findings of previous studies that had reported a reduction in left ventricular (LV) mass in AN with echocardiography [5]. These authors suggested that the relationship between QT dispersion and LV mass index in the starvation phase of AN might be the factor responsible for the increased QT dispersion [4]. The purpose of the present study was to assess cardiac structural and functional abnormalities some 20 years after initial treatment in a sample of adolescent-onset anorexia nervosa (A-AN) and to compare them with matched healthy controls (HC)

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